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Chinguacousy Civic Centre opened in 1972 at 150 Central Park Drive and is home to the Lester B. Pearson Theatre. Home to Brampton City Council from 1974 until 1991. Library closed in 2023 and relocated to temporary home at Ski Chalet at Chinguacousy Park as site the future home to Toronto Metropolitan University’s Medical School. [13]
By late 1930, a contract for 3,770 short tons (3,370 long tons; 3,420 t) of structural steel had been awarded for the building's construction. [7] The developers field plans for Hampshire House in early 1931, [8] and the New York Title and Mortgage Company gave the builders a construction loan of $2.2 million in March 1931. [9]
Formerly at 150 Central Park Drive from 1972 or 1973 and was located inside the Bramalea Civic Centre. Brampton was the first public library system in Ontario to acquire federal and provincial case law records. The case law collection was opened in this branch in 1978, on the prompt of the Central Ontario Regional Library System. [9]
Coleraine Drive is designated Peel Road 150 and spurs off Highway 50, where it turns east to continue as Major Mackenzie Drive (York Road 25) into Vaughan, and runs north to Mayfield Road where it continues north into the west end of Bolton, a large community within Caledon. It still runs through a wholly rural area in the extreme northeast ...
Donald M. Gordon Chinguacousy Park, colloquially known as Chinguacousy Park, is a large 40-hectare (100-acre) park [1] in the Bramalea section of Brampton, Ontario, Canada. It is bounded by Queen Street East on the southeast, Bramalea Road on the northeast, and Central Park Drive on the north and west sides.
Under the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution the riding will largely replace Brampton Centre in areas east of Highway 410 plus the neighbourhoods of Westgate, Central Park, and Northgate plus all of Sandringham-Wellington east of Dixie Road and south of Sandalwood Parkway from the Brampton North riding. [1]
(Chisholm, a merchant and founding father of Brampton, had been the Town reeve, then warden of Peel County, then MPP for Brampton and eventually, Registrar of Peel County.) [8] Sir William donated 1.7 acres (0.7 hectares) of the property to the town, with a specific condition that it be made into a park. Citizens donated $1,054 and the town ...
[7] [4] The Central Park Conservancy's overall endowment was over $200 million in 2014. [5] Much of this amount came from large donations. The largest was in October 2012, when hedge fund manager John A. Paulson announced a $100 million gift to the Central Park Conservancy, the largest ever monetary donation to New York City's park system.